O`ktamova Marjonaning “Etymological doublets” Mavzusidagi kurs ishi


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5 Semantic change
Semantic change It is common for the meaning of words to change over time. The resulting differences in meaning may be slight or major, depending on a variety of factors and the changes can be assigned to a variety of categories. Generalisation is a process by which a word acquires a broader meaning than it originally had. This widening of the scope of a word’s meaning indicates that specific aspects of its designation must be have been dropped. For example, the word holiday formerly referred only to ‘holy days’, i.e. ‘days of religious celebrations’, but now it refers to any non-work day, not necessarily anything sacred or related to religious practices. Some other examples comprise: box, formerly ‘a small container of boxwood’; scent, formerly ‘an animal odor used for tracking’; carry, formerly ‘to transport in a vehicle’; butcher, formerly ‘one who slaughters goats’. Specialisation is the opposite process. It leads to narrowing down the meaning of a word, making it name a subcategory of 26 Beyond Philology 15/2 the category it originally named. It often happens that specialisation of a word coincides with the borrowing a foreign word. The semantic scope of a corresponding native word shrinks, so that the borrowed word can stay in the language and bear a portion of the original, native meaning. The example from English that Brinton and Arnovick11 provide is the Germanic word lust, which originally referred to ‘desire in general’, a meaning now expressed by the French borrowing desire. Lust is now specialised to ‘sexual desire’. “Whether this process is a matter of the borrowed word forcing the native word to be specialised or, conversely, the specialisation causing a need for a more general term to be borrowed is not entirely clear” (Brinton and Arnovick 2006: 79). Other examples of specialisation are as follows: acorn, formerly ‘wild fruit’; adder, formerly ‘a snake’; adventure, formerly ‘happening’; meat, formerly ‘food’. Pejoration is the process by which the meaning of a word becomes negative, or less elevated, over a period of time. It often coincides with specialisation. Some examples of pejoration are the following: villain, formerly ‘a low-born or common person’; clown, formerly ‘a rural person’; smug, formerly ‘neat’; poison, formerly ‘potion, drink’. Amelioration, in contrast, consists of acquiring a more positively charged meaning, which may involve a change in denotation or connotation. It also often coincides with specialisation. Some examples are as follows: queen, formerly ‘a woman of good birth’; jolly, formerly ‘arrogant, wanton, lustful’; Kamola-Uberman: The morphosemantics… 27 spill, formerly ‘to shed blood’; nice, formerly ‘silly, simple’; engineer, formerly ‘a plotter, schemer’. Weakening and strengthening also occur when a speaker uses a weaker or a stronger word than required by the circumstances. Strengthening and weakening have to do with the force of word meaning, with its intensity. “In general, strengthening is rarer in language than weakening – evidence that people are more prone to exaggeration (which tends to weaken meanings) than to understatement (which tends to strengthen meanings)” (Millward 1988:181-182). Instead of using a taboo word, that is, a word describing topics people find it difficult to talk about, such as unpleasant jobs, parts of the body, sex, pregnancy, birth, bodily functions, disease, old age and death, they tend to use socially accepted words called euphemisms (from the Greek word meaning ‘to speak favourably’). Examples of weakening are the following: adore from ‘worship as divine’ to ‘like’; swelter from ‘faint from excessive heat’ to ‘be hot’; starve from ‘die from lack of food’ to ‘be hungry’. An example of strengthening is: molest acquired the denotation ‘to subject to unwanted or improper sexual activity12’. 5. Methodology An etymological dictionary is an indispensable aid for the task of recognizing and studying doublets. Such a dictionary provides the earliest attested use of a word, the route through which it entered English, e.g. via French or Latin or directly from Proto-Germanic and Proto-Indo-European; cognates in other languages, semantic changes the word underwent and 28 Beyond Philology 15/2 sometimes some additional information, e.g. collocations with other words or useful expressions with the given word. For the purpose of this paper, the main source of information was Online Etymology Dictionary, an exceptionally thorough compilation of a vast number of written sources, based mainly on Weekley’s An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English, Klein’s A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language, Oxford English Dictionary (second edition), Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology, Holthausen’s Etymologisches Wörterbuch der Englischen Sprache, and Kipfer and Chapman’s Dictionary of American Slang. Apart from these main sources, there are a considerable number of others, which can be found at the following web address: https://www.etymonline.com/columns/post/sources [accessed 04.2018]. The pairs of words analysed below have been selected randomly out of the pool of available doublets, some of which have already been given as examples earlier in this paper or from other collections which the present author has gathered them. The doublets have been classified into a number of categories discussed in detail in part 2. These categories are: 1. Doublets where both words are of native origin. 2. Doublets where one of the words is of native origin and the other is a borrowing: a) of Latinate origin; b) of Scandinavian origin; c) a foreign word of Germanic origin borrowed into English. 3. Doublets where both words are of borrowed origin. a) one word is of Norman-French origin and the other is of Central-French origin; b) the words are borrowed from a certain language and its daughter language, e.g. Latin and French; c) one word is borrowed from a certain language and the other is borrowed from the same source via a different language. For each category, one pair of doublets has been selected as its example. Kamola-Uberman: The morphosemantics… 29 The words forming respective doublets have been studied in terms of their earliest attested use in an ancestral language, their way of entering English and the semantic change they underwent. 6. A comparison of selected doublets 6.1. Both words are of native English origin As was mentioned at the beginning of this paper, such pairs include a native word which at some point in time split into two separate lexemes slightly diverged in meaning, and both of these words have remained in the language. Table 9 Comparison of shadow and shade Shadow Shade borrowed from native Germanic native Germanic entered English N/A (not applicable) N/A common origin Old English scead ‘partial darkness; shelter, protection’, sceadu ‘shade, shadow, darkness; shady place, arbor, protection from glare or heat’ both from Proto-Germanic *skadwaz, from PIE *skotwo-, from root *skot- ‘dark, shade’ additional information (from Etymonline http://www.ety monline.com [access 04.2018]) From mid-13c. as ‘darkened area created by shadows, shade.’ From early 13c. in the sense ‘anything unreal’; mid-14c. as ‘a ghost’; late 14c. as ‘a foreshadowing, prefiguration’. Meaning ‘a ghost’ is from 1610s. Sense of ‘window blind’ first recorded in 1845. Meaning ‘cover to protect the eyes’ is from 1801. Meaning ‘grade of colour’ first recorded 1680s; that of ‘degree or gradation of darkness in a colour’ is from 1680s. 30 Beyond Philology 15/2 semantic change From OE sceadu ‘shade, shadow, darkness; shady place, arbour, protection from glare or heat’ to OE sceadwe, sceaduwe ‘the effect of interception of sunlight, dark image cast by someone or something when interposed between an object and a source of light’ to ModE shadow ‘the dark shape that sb/sth’s form makes on a surface (...) when they are between the light and the surface’ (Oxford Dictionary 2010: 1402). From OE sceadu ‘shade, shadow, darkness; shady place, arbour, protection from glare or heat’ to late OE scead ‘partial darkness; shelter, protection’ to ModE shade ‘an area which is dark and cool under or behind sth (...) because the sun’s light does not get to it’ (Oxford Dictionary 2010: 1402). comment The two words bear opposite axiological loads: shadow evokes rather negative connotations, whereas shade gives rise to rather positive ones. The "parent" word, thus, may have covered both meanings which were later distributed between two separate lexemes. What can be observed in this case is specialisation, rather than a considerable change in meaning. 6.2. One word is of native origin and the other is a borrowing The next example of a doublet is a pair of words, one of which is inherited directly from a parent language (from PIE to ProtoGermanic, and then to English) and the other is a cognate borrowed from a sister or cousin tongue.
Native word – Latin borrowing Table 10 Comparison of cow and beef Cow Beef borrowed from native Germanic Latin via Old French entered English N/A c.1300 common origin from PIE root *gwou-’cow, ox, bull’ additional information (from Etymonline http://www.ety monline.com [access 04.2018]) In Germanic and Celtic, of females only; in most other languages, of either gender. Other ‘cow’ words sometimes are from roots meaning ‘horn, horned,’ such as Lithuanian karve, Old Church Slavonic krava. Original plural was beeves. Modern French boeuf. semantic change From PIE *gwous ‘cow’ to Proto-Germanic *kwom to *kwon ‘cow’ to Old English cu ‘cow,’ to ModE ‘cow’. From PIE *gwous ‘cow, ox, bull’ to Latin bovem (nominative bos, genitive bovis) ‘ox, cow’, to Old French buef ‘ox, beef, ox hide’ to ModE ‘the meet of a cow’. comment Beef underwent specialisation of meaning on the basis of a metonymic relation: the name of the animal came to represent the meat of the animal. Cow did not undergo any semantic change, or it may be onomatopoeic, imitative of lowing. If so, then it also is an instance of metonymy: the sound emitted by an animal represents the animal. 32 Beyond Philology 15/2 6.2.2. Native word – Scandinavian borrowing Table 11 Comparison of shirt and skirt Shirt Skirt borrowed from native Germanic Old Norse entered English N/A Early 14c. common origin from Proto-Germanic *skurtjon ‘a short garment’, from PIE *(s)ker- (1) ‘to cut’. additional information (from Etymonline http://www.ety monline.com [access 04.2018]) Related to Old English scort, sceort ‘short’. Formerly of the chief garment worn by both sexes, but in modern use only of that for men. Sense development from ‘shirt’ to ‘skirt’ is possibly related to the long shirts of peasant garb (compare Low German cognate Schört, in some dialects ‘woman’s gown’). semantic change From PGmc *skurtjon ‘a short garment’ to OE scyrte ‘skirt, tunic,’ ModE shirt ‘a piece of clothing (usually for men), worn on the upper part of body, made of light cloth, with sleeves and usually with a collar and buttons down the front. From PGmc *skurtjon ‘a short garment’ to Old Norse skyrta ‘shirt, a kind of kirtle’ to MidE skirt ‘lower part of a woman’s dress’ to ModE skirt ‘a piece of clothing for a woman or girl that hangs from the waist’ comment When compared to the first common ancestor, the meaning of the above two words did not change considerably: both shirt and skirt name a short garment (from the waist up or down), the words specialised. In comparison to the older ancestor, PIE *(s)ker- (1) ‘to cut’, their meaning changes more considerably, but a connection is easily observable: a ‘short garment’ has to be ‘cut’ to become short Native word – foreign word of Germanic origin borrowed into English There are cases of Latin or French words of Germanic origin borrowed into English, which form doublets with English words inherited directly from Proto-Germanic. Native word – Germanic borrowing via Latin and French Table 12 Comparison of ban and abandon Ban Abandon borrowed from native Germanic Frankish via Latin and French entered English N/A Late 14c. common origin from Proto-Germanic *bannan ‘proclaim, command, forbid’; originally ‘to speak publicly,’ from PIE root *bha- (2) ‘to speak’. additional information is from Old Norse cognate banna ‘to curse, prohibit’, and probably in part from Old French ban, which meant, among other things, ‘outlawry, banishment’ and was a borrowing from Germanic. The sense evolution in Germanic was from ‘speak’ to ‘proclaim a threat’ to (in Norse, German, etc.) ‘curse’. Etymologically, the word carries the sense ‘put someone under someone else’s control.’ Meaning ‘to give up absolutely’ is from late 14c. 34 Beyond Philology 15/2 semantic change From PGmc *bannan ‘proclaim, command, forbid’ to OE bannan ‘to summon, command, proclaim’, to ModE ban ‘to prohibit’, the last sense is a semantic loan from Old Norse and probably from Old French. From PGmc *bannan ‘proclaim, command, forbid’ to Latin bannum ‘proclamation’ to Old French abandoner (12c.), from adverbial phrase à bandon ‘at will, at discretion,’ from à ‘at, to’ + bandon ‘power, jurisdiction’, to MidE ‘to give up, surrender (oneself or something), give over utterly; to yield (oneself) utterly (to religion, fornication, etc.)’, to ModE ‘to leave completely and finally; forsake utterly; desert’. comment The semantic change of ban is rather moderate. Its meaning specialised from ‘proclaim, command, forbid’ to the current ‘prohibit, forbid’. Abandon, on the other hand, has changed considerably in the semantic respect. 6Comparison of ring and arrange Ring Arrange borrowed from native Germanic Old French entered English N/A late 14c. common origin from Proto-Germanic *hringaz ‘circle, ring, something curved’ additional information (from Etymonline http://www.ety monline.com [access 04.2018]) From PIE *(s)kreghnasalized form of (s)kregh-, from root *(s)ker- (3) ‘to turn, bend,’ with wideranging derivative senses. A rare word until the meaning generalized to ‘to place things in semantic change From PGmc *hringaz ‘circle, ring, something curved’ to OE hring ‘small circlet, especially one of metal for wearing on the finger or as part of a mail coat; anything circular’, to ModE ‘circular band’. From PGmc *hringaz ‘circle, ring, something curved’, to Frankish *hring ‘circle, ring’, to OFr arengier (12c.), from a- ‘to’ + rangier ‘set in a row’ (Modern French ranger), from rang ‘rank’, to Middle English ‘draw up a line of battle’, to ModE ‘place things in order’. comment The semantic change of ring is very slight, nowadays it also carries a very broad meaning, as seems to have been the case in Proto-Germanic. Arrange, on the other hand, has changed its meaning considerably. The sense which connects it to the other member of the doublet is ‘to neatly place as around a circle’. 6.3. Both words are borrowings 6.3.1. One word is of Norman-French origin and the other is of Central-French origin Table 14 Comparison of catch and chase Catch Chase borrowed from Anglo-French or Old North French (Norman French) Old French (Central French) entered English C.1200 C.1300 common origin from Vulgar Latin *captiare ‘try to seize, chase’ additional information (from Etymonline http://www.etym online.com [access 04.2018]) Old French chacier ‘hunt, pursue, drive (animals),’ Modern French chasser ‘to hunt’. Senses in early Middle English also included ‘chase, hunt,’ which later went with chase. Meaning ‘run after’ developed mid-14c. 36 Beyond Philology 15/2 semantic change From Latin captare ‘to take, hold’ to Vulgar Latin *captiare ‘try to seize, chase’ to Old North French cachier ‘catch, capture’ to ModE catch ‘to take, capture’. From Latin captare ‘to take, hold’ to Vulgar Latin captiare ‘try to seize, chase’ to OFr chacier ‘to hunt, ride swiftly, strive for’ to OE chacen ‘to hunt; to cause to go away; put to flight’ to ModE chase ‘to run, drive, etc. after sb/sth in order to catch them’ (Oxford Dictionary 2012:245). comment Both words underwent specialisation. The notions of chasing something and catching something are strongly related. They both participate in the Idealised Cognitive Model of a hunt, as whence the polysemy of the original Latin word. 6.3.2. Words borrowed from a certain language and its daughter language, e.g. Latin and French Table 15 Comparison of flame and flagrant Flame Flagrant borrowed from Latin via Franch Latin entered English Mid-14c. C.1500 common origin from PIE *bhleg- ‘to shine, flash,’ from root *bhel- (1) ‘to shine, flash, burn’ semantic change From PIE *bhleg- ‘to shine, flash, burn’ to Latin flamma ‘flame, blazing fire’ to Latin flammula ‘small flame’ to OFr flamme and ModE flame ‘a hot bright stream of burning gas that comes from sth that is on fire’ (Oxford Dictionary 2010:585). From PIE *bhleg- ‘to shine, flash, burn’ to Latin flagrans ‘to burn, blaze, glow’ to figurative ‘glowing with passion, eager, vehement’ to Early ModE ‘resplendent’ to ModE flagrant ‘shocking because it is done in a very obvious way and shows no respect for people, laws, etc.’ (Oxford Dictionary 2010:585). comment The meaning of flame has remained almost unchanged. Flagrant has assumed a figurative sense – instead of real fire it describes a passionate thing, a deed accomplished with a negative kind of passion, a temper which is "as hot as fire".



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